Current:Home > StocksOhio can freeze ex-top utility regulator’s $8 million in assets, high court says -GrowthInsight
Ohio can freeze ex-top utility regulator’s $8 million in assets, high court says
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:17:16
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The legal dispute over whether it was appropriate to freeze $8 million in personal assets belonging to a former top Ohio utility regulator caught up in a federal bribery investigation has ping-ponged once again.
In a ruling Tuesday, the Ohio Supreme Court reversed the Tenth District Court of Appeals’ decision and reinstated a lower court’s order, allowing Sam Randazzo’s assets to be frozen once again. The high court determined the appeals court erred on a technicality when it unfroze Randazzo’s property.
It’s just the latest development in the yearslong fight over property belonging to Randazzo, a one-time chairman of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. Federal prosecutors last month charged Randazzo with 11 counts in connection with an admission by Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp. that it paid him a $4.3 million bribe in exchange for favorable treatment. Randazzo has pleaded not guilty.
Writing for the majority, Justice Pat DeWine said the three-judge panel was wrong when it unfroze Randazzo’s assets in December 2022 — a decision that had been on hold amid the ongoing litigation. The panel reversed a lower court, finding that the state had not proven it would suffer “irreparable injury” if Randazzo were given control of his property.
“The problem is that the irreparable injury showing was not appealable,” DeWine wrote.
Instead, when Randazzo wanted to object to a Franklin County judge’s unilateral decision from August 2021 granting Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost’s request to freeze his assets, the appropriate remedy would have been a full hearing before the trial court, the high court said. As a result, the court reversed the appellate court’s decision.
Yost made his request out of concern that Randazzo appeared to be scrambling to unload personal assets. He transferred a home worth $500,000 to his son and liquidated other properties worth a combined $4.8 million, sending some $3 million of the proceeds to his lawyers in California and Ohio.
During oral arguments in the case this summer, lawyers disagreed sharply over whether the assets should have been frozen. An attorney for Yost’s office told justices Randazzo was “spending down criminal proceeds” when the attorney general moved in to freeze his assets. Randazzo’s lawyer argued that the state needed more than “unsupported evidence” of a bribe to block Randazzo’s access to his property and cash.
Randazzo resigned as PUCO chair in November 2020 after FBI agents searched his Columbus home, close on the heels of the arrest of then-Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and four others.
The bribe that FirstEnergy said it paid Randazzo was part of a scheme that a jury determined was led by Householder to win the speakership, elect allies, pass a $1 billion bailout of two aging FirstEnergy-affiliated nuclear plants and block a referendum to repeal the bailout bill.
Householder, a Republican, and lobbyist Matt Borges, a former chair of the Ohio GOP, were convicted on racketeering charges in March for their roles in the scheme. Householder, considered the ringleader, was sentenced to 20 years in prison, and Borges to five. Both are pursuing appeals.
veryGood! (8484)
Related
- Taylor Swift Cancels Austria Concerts After Confirmation of Planned Terrorist Attack
- Global Warming Was Already Fueling Droughts in Early 1900s, Study Shows
- Fracking Ban About to Become Law in Maryland
- Long Phased-Out Refrigeration and Insulation Chemicals Still Widely in Use and Warming the Climate
- PHOTO COLLECTION: AP Top Photos of the Day Wednesday August 7, 2024
- Amid Doubts, Turkey Powers Ahead with Hydrogen Technologies
- Walgreens won't sell abortion pills in red states that threatened legal action
- Emma Heming Willis Wants to Talk About Brain Health
- Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
- Nusrat Chowdhury confirmed as first Muslim female federal judge in U.S. history
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Infant found dead inside garbage truck in Ohio
- Honduran president ends ban on emergency contraception, making it widely available
- 'Are you a model?': Crickets are so hot right now
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Tennessee becomes the first state to pass a ban on public drag shows
- 3 children among 6 found dead in shooting at Tennessee house; suspect believed to be among the dead
- Have you tried to get an abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned? Share your story
Recommendation
$1 Frostys: Wendy's celebrates end of summer with sweet deal
The Real Housewives of Atlanta's Season 15 Taglines Revealed
Germany’s Nuke Shutdown Forces Utility Giant E.ON to Cut 11,000 Jobs
Daniel Ellsberg, Pentagon Papers leaker, dies at age 92 of pancreatic cancer, family says
Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
James Marsden Reacts to Renewed Debate Over The Notebook Relationships: Lon or Noah?
These Texas DAs refused to prosecute abortion. Republican lawmakers want them stopped
Chinese Solar Boom a Boon for American Polysilicon Producers